w w w w -lw_ -w- -,Iw w qw w - -- I. - .. - 0S Wednesday, November 14, 2007 - The Michiganua4y AG3 ANSWERS rule 63: Just because your roommate leaves the gold- fish on a low shelf doesn't make it fair game. rule 64: With only a few excep- tions, emoti- cons should be left to sixth graders. rule 65: Drunk dial propositions are acceptable; drunk dial texts are not. A look at the big news events this week and how important they really are. Conveniently rated from one to 10. HAPPY DAYS, VETERANS DAY Although you might have skipped right over it like Sweet- est Day last month, Sunday was Veterans Day, maybe the only day that America cares about veterans. In a rush of holiday spirit, President Bush expressed hisgratitude to the veterans of the war in Iraq by extendingtheir tours of duty and offering wounded veterans a stay at the lovely Walter Reed Army Medical Center. WHAT DOES NASA STAND FOR AGAIN? Landing Wednesday in Florida, the space shuttle Dis- covery completed alsv-day mission to repair a portion of the International Space Station. In a recent poll, most respondents weren't surprised that the historic repair went successfully; they were instead stunned that NASA still exists. Big black emptiness is only worth America's time iftthe Soviet Union or Lance Bass is involved. GOD AND GIULIANI As if Rudy Giuliani needed to bolster his image as a shady politician, his long-time friend, business partner and employee Bernard Kerik was indicted last week on charges of fraud and corruption. In Giuliani's 4 defense, evangelical preacher Pat Robertson, who endorsed Giuliani last week, contended that even God would cater to organized k crime, as long as He could lower taxes and end abortion rights. - E-mail rule submissions to TheStatemnent@umich.edu MagazineEditor:AnneVanderMe, AssociateMagazineEditor: Jessica Vosgerchiar EditorinChief:KarlStamnpf Maaginditor. nil cy Blom Phoo Editor Emma NolanAbaia Designer:BridgetO'Donnel Coverphoto:ZacharyMeisne APPARENTLY, PAUL IS NOT DEAD Moving from a joke candidate to a significantly wealthier joke candidate, Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul raised more than $4 million in a single day from 6 roughly 37,000 Internet donors last week. In related news, roughly 37,000 libertarians wasted their money in a futile effort to destroy the federal government. NOT EVEN THE CHILDREN ARE SAFE After discovering that it contains a chemical that con- verts into the date rape drug GHB when ingested, a >. Chinese-made children's toy, Aqua Dots, was recalled 4 last week. Authorities warned that although the pick-up line for the product, "Super designs, Super fun!" may be tempting, watch out for creepy men turningto slip the moldable beads into your drink. A STUDENT REVOLUTION, JUST NOT HERE As one of the only opposition forces to Venezuelan President Hugo Chdvez's increasingly oppressive gov- ernment, 80,000 students turned out for a protest 8 in Caracas last week to voice their opposition to 69 constitutional amendment proposed by Chavez. Makes you feel good to know that at least somewhere students Ycare. ERSON OF THE WEEK POPE BENEDICT XVI In a week marked by Pakistani Martial Law and a collapsing U.S. stock market, it's hard to imag- ine that the pope would make headlines. But that's what hap- pened last week when Benedict XVI received King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia at the Vatican. Decked out in their respective stately robes, the two leaders clasped $1 ,268 hands and spoke cordially S,438 about the need for inter- faith co-operation in what $2,248 was the first meeting ever $1,218 between a sitting pope and a Saudi king. $1,428 While the pope did not win all he wanted in terms $1,698 of protections for Saudi Arabia's embattled Chris- $728 tian population, the king's $418.gift to the pope of a sword means Saudi Arabia's 1.5 million Christians at least have one less weapon to November 21, 2007 fear. " The good news is it doesn't make any difference what you major in as an undergraduate at the University. Ten years later no one is going to care. A Michigan education is only the start down a long road of a life- time of education, and that's the rea- son it doesn't make a difference. . In the past, most Michigan presi- dents have either sailed off to other Universities - Harold Shapiro or Lee Bollinger - or retired and disap- peared or died. I'm still here. @1 chair a lot of committees. I some- times call myself a professional chair- person. " I viewed my own role as much more strategic leadership. In other words, focusing more on what the University could and should become 10, 20, 30 years out, recognizing that these are institutions that, while they serve the needs at the moment, also have a responsibility to preserve their capacity to serve the future. " It's very hard to predict the future. This operation has an awful lot of balls in the air. I'm on at any point in time a dozen efforts - commissions. Some go splat. Some bounce. To work in this kind of activity, you have to be able to tolerate the occasional failure. * We had the opportunity to take on a contract from the federal govern- ment to link a number of universities to what were at that time a number of very unusual super computers scat- tered about the country. We called it the internetwork. You can see where I'm headed. That was the Internet. That's an example of leadership that you just cannot anticipate. . Some of the themes I'm working on right now are, ironically, the same things I talked about in my inaugura- tion speech in 1988. They are changes in our world caused by globalization, by changes in demography, by tech- nology. They are continuing to be the three drivers of change in our soci- ety. " I wish I could have written Thom- as Friedman's book 10 years before he did. He gets paid quite a lot per speech, and I usually buy my own lunch. " The transition (from president to faculty member) was a transition from delegation to execution. When you're president, or dean, who can say, "Wouldn't it be great if some- one did, this, that or the other," and someone will try it out. In my role now, they'll say 'Well, why don't you do it.' I've learned how to make coffee and get airplane tickets and do a lot of things I didn't have to do as presi- dent. * We practice engineering the same way we did a century ago. We pre- tend that an undergraduate educa- tion is good enough to be an engineer. We pretend that U.S. engineers are the best, so therefore we don't need to worry about engineers in China or India and so forth. I believe engineering must go through the same transition that medicine and law did and become a graduate professional school. ! There are perhaps as many as 250 million people (worldwide) that will be ready for a college education by 2010. We would have to build a uni- versity the size of the University of Michigan every week to meet that need. The next question is how you meet that need, because if you don't have an education you're kind of out of it. Your personal welfare depends on it. * Any institutions that last a long time have a kind of mythology about them, whether events or people or buildings or fight songs. And those mythologies take on a life of their own and begin to shape the institutions into what they are. And part of the challenge to lead institutions is to figure out what that mythology or saga is. If you build on it, you're generally successful. If you don't understand it, or don't care about it, you're in trouble because these institutions last for hundreds of years. They're like big ocean liners. You can't just turn them around fast. The chairman From his corner office on the second floor of the Duderstadt Building on North Campus, former university president James Duderstadt might not be at the helm of the University anymore, but he's changing the world of higher education just the same. Here, Duderstadt talks about some of his committees and projects, the future of the University and how he learned about the little things - like buying plane tickets - since he left his office in the Fleming Building - As told to Kelly Fraser They keep on going. " The University's role, when it has been successful, has always been that as a pathfinder, a trailblazer. In other words, we're best when we try and do things that are different. We're good at that. We're not very good about following. If we see someone else doing something interesting and try and imitate them, we some- times fall flat on our faces. " The University throughout its history has been a public- private hybrid. It's had a pub- lic character, but yet had the aspiration of excellence more characteristic of an elite private institution. M Student activism on cam- pus has had kind of a change-the-world attitude. That's good. But when they take over your office in the Fleming Administra- tive Build- ing, it can be kind of a hassle. Stu- dents have the capacity, sometimes, to sense issues that people who have been around too long just can't sense. 0 I think Michigan will be the university that figures out how to go to 20 to 30 years as a privately supported public univer- sity. I C R A 7\/ SJ L E Only available through the Computer Showcase http://showcaseitcs.umich.edu Sale ends -------------- i